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This point of view is when the narrator is a character in the story. They use pronouns I, me, my, we, etc.
First Person
What is the author's purpose? Hint (PIE)
persuade, inform, entertain
This point of view is rarely used. The narrator uses "you" like in a recipe
Second Person
The ____ _____ _____ is the perspective from which the story is told.
Point of View
The narrator tells you what a single chracter is thinking or feeling. They use the pronouns he, she, and they.
Third Person Limited
The narrator tells a story without describing any chracters's thoughts, opinions, or feelings.
Third Person Objective
The narrator knows everything about every character. They use the pronouns he, she, and they.
Third Person Omniscient
The author reveals a character's attributes by stating them directly.
Direct Characterization
The class of literature comprising works of narrative prose based upon facts and reality. Fiction or Nonfiction
Nonfiction
A conclusion or judge from premises or evidence.
Inference
The class of literature comprising works of imaginative narration, especially in prose form. Fiction or Nonfiction
Fiction
The author reveals a character's attributes through his/her actions dialogue, and interactions with others.
Indirect Characterization
A character that does not experience conflicts and does not grow or change through the story.
Flat Character
A character that stays the same throughout the story.
Static Character
The way the author presents the chatracter to the audience.
Characterization
A character that changes throughout the story.
Dynamic Character
A central character that experiences conflict and changes and grows through the story.
Round Character
The time and place in which a story takes place.
Setting
The events that make up a story.
Plot
Teaches a lesson from the story.
Theme
The problem within the story.
Conflict
The feeling that a narrative evokes in the reader.
Mood
Foreshadowing is one literary technique that authors use to build ____________.
Suspense
______ ______ happens when the audience knows something that the characters do not know.
Dramatic Irony
______ ______ happens when someone says something other than what they mean.
Verbal Irony
_______ _______ happens when what actually happens is the opposite of what is expected or appropriate.
Situaltional Irony
What type of conflict would represent a fight between two people?
Man vs Man
What type of conflict would represent a fear of heights?
Man vs Self
What type of conflict would represent a tornado tearing down a house?
Man vs Nature
What type of conflict would represent a person running a stop sign?
Man vs Society
Label each example with the correct figurative language. The table danced across the room during the earthquake.
Personification
Label each example with the correct figurative language. The test was a breeze.
Metaphor
Label each example with the correct figurative language. Busy as a bee.
Simile
Label each example with the correct figurative language. The car whooshed past me in a blur.
Onomatopoeia
Label each example with the correct figurative language. The bright sun warmed the soft, green grass as the clouds drifted through the baby blue sky.
Imagery
Label each example with the correct figurative language. Mark liked to trick Chuck.
Consonance
Label each example with the correct figurative language. My boyfriend is in the doghouse.
Idiom
Label each example with the correct figurative language. Tim took tons of tools to make toys.
Alliteration
Label each example with the correct figurative language. If you think you can win, you can win.
Repetition
Label each example with the correct figurative language. I have tons of money saved up in the bank.
Hyperbole
Label each example with the correct figurative language. John felt a cold chill run down his neck as he entered the dark alley alone.
Foreshadowing
Label each example with the correct figurative language. When John stepped onto the field a year later, he could still see his teammate run across the plate to win the championship game.
Flashback
Label each example with the correct figurative language. If you can't do the time, don't do the crime.
Rhyme
Label each example with the correct figurative language. I'm glad I know sign language; it's pretty handy.
Pun